Hi everyone! My name is Andy Whisenant and I have the incredible opportunity of working with the amazing HopeHouse International team in Ukraine this week. I’ve been blown away each day as this team serves with everything they have and as they love these beautiful kids well.

Yesterday we had the chance to spend time in Zapporrozhia at two different orphanages. We were so thankful for some shade and a cool breeze as we worked outside during the day.As the ship docked in Zapporrozhia, I started to recognize some of the sites from last year when we visited this same area. Our bus drove through the city neighborhoods until we pulled up to our first orphanage visit for the day.

I immediately recognized this first orphanage we were visiting. Last year when we visited this same orphanage, I met a little boy named Stasch. When we met him then, he had been left by his mother only a few days before our arrival. He kept asking up to just take him home. We had to tell him we didn’t know where he lived, which he countered with, “That’s ok, just take me to the bus station and I’ll find my way.” (Insert the sound of your heart breaking into a couple of thousand pieces here).

As we walked through the orphanage yard and started to set up, I kept looking around for Stasch. My constant prayer for this last year, “Please, God, let him be in a loving home,” echoed through that orphanage yard.

After a few minutes, I saw Stasch. He was rolled outside in a bed, in restraints to keep him from hurting himself. And my heart just sank.

I went up to him and started to talk to him in my very limited Russian. We asked what had happened to him that would cause him to be bedridden and found out that because of malnutrition, his hip joint had been damaged and even the slightest fall could do major damage. The caretakers at the orphanage told us that he would have to remain in the bed with very little movement for up to two years.

Everything in me screamed, “No! This is not right! This cannot be!” Little boys are supposed to be in loving families where they’re told they matter. Little boys are supposed to be able to have proper nutrition to make them healthy and strong. Little boys are supposed to be able to run and jump and play.

I got to spend some quality time with Stasch, and for that I’m so very thankful. We sang songs, fought with balloon swords, did some face painting, and looked through his new Russian kids Bible together.

To say yesterday was a tough one is a bit of an understatement. But even in the midst of the darkness, where all hope seems to be lost, where little boys and girls grow up without families and are kept in bed for years at a time, I still choose to hope. I still choose to hope that this is not the end of Stasch’s story. I still choose to hope that, in the end, this injustice will be made right.

That is truly why HopeHouse International exists . . . so that one orphan at a time . . . one home at a time . . . a child can experience the unconditional love of a family and the unconditional love of Christ. True HOPE!One of my favorite writers, Donald Miller, has said, “lets choose to do something really difficult, something that saves lives, and let’s do that thing with people we love.” The “something” that God’s invited this team to be a part of this week is really difficult. And while playing games and singing songs and giving hugs may not immediately fix the overwhelming orphan crisis in Ukraine, it gives these children a chance to feel healthy emotions, some for the very first time, which they will then associate with the day the American’s visited and the day they heard about Christ love for them. What a privilege! And a privilege to do this ‘something’ with people that I truly believe in and care about. That makes all the difference.

So we ask you to pray. Pray for little kids like Stasch who listened to us share the message of who Christ is — that they would come to personally know their Creator and discover their value and worth in Him. Pray for our team as we enter the downhill slope of this grand adventure. And pray about how you can be a part of this story too. I hear there’s a great HopeHouse International trip coming up next year (hint, hint).

What a glorious whirlwind day!!! Someone said we saw 200 Children, between the two Orphanages. There were minutesa that it seemed like 2000!!! The Clowns always get hit with the first wave, then Face Painting, the ladies painting the little girls nails, and they run a cluster of excited faces over to the Cameras so that each child can have his own personal photo made. This year we gave each child a Journal, that begins with a color group-photo of all of us on this Mission Trip. Then their own photo slides into the plastic sleeve beside it. An excelent tool for them to remember the events of today, and materials to help them focus on the message.

We started our day shocked as the orphanage Staff litteraly rolled a Hospital bed out in the courtyard, complete with a young boy. Has sad, we thought, but also haw good for him to be allowed to be involved. Then it was an “oh my” moment as we saw a second bed coming, then a third…the a few on crutches appeared. There is no telling how many “live wires” were running circles around us…but God kept drawing us, one by one, to the four laying on their stomachs watching the fun and then the program. The business at had moved on, but I wish you could have counted the tears of this Mission Team, as Dr. David Young scooped up little Victoria from her bed, and carried her in his arms up to the front so she could see. We haven’t the space to tell you a dozen other stories that were sharred tonight. I wish each one of you could somehow be linked into the nightly worship times we share, after Supper.

One of our hillarious FHBC Clowns led four teenage boys in the Sinners Prayer. Oh my, again. We prayed for seed planting, and God suddenly sent us a little harvest. Saved by His power divine, they were saved to a new life sublime!!!

We’re refreshed, and re-motivated, and we push on down river to Kherson for Day Four.
– Bob Crawford –

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In many countries, adequate housing is a barrier for most citizens, and it is a government prerequisite for adoption in most cases. HopeHouse International® enables adoptions by addressing adequate housing needs which result in three or more children being given a family and a future. Won't you consider joining our mission. Learn more by clicking one of the areas of interest above.

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